Alaskan VolcanoesRedoubt, Augustine, Spurr

IntroductionAlaskan volcanoes are monitored today by scientists. Over 40 are potentially active volcanoes. These volcanoes are a major threat to air because of ash and potential tsunamis.

Dormant volcanoesThere are another 50 volcanoes that might be
dormant and could reawaken in the future. Mt. Pinatubo in the
Philippines was considered extinct until 1991 when it awakened and produced the second largest eruption of the 20th century.

Redoubt Volcano, AVO,USGS

Hazards to airplanesThe Alaskan volcanoes can erupt at any time sending a plume of ash
thousands of feet into the air that potentially could cause planes to
crash hundreds of miles from the eruption.

Ash cloudsSometimes the ash clouds reach over 45,000-feet. Redoubt volcano is only 110
miles southeast of Anchorage. Airplanes routinely fly over or near the
mountain. The last eruption in 2009 shut the Anchorage airport down
several times because of the potential danger from the erupting ash.

Aleutian chainRemote volcanic islands on the Aleutian chain can erupt at any time. Most of the islands are in a subduction zone with active volcanoes. The ash from one of these volcanoes poses a major threat to airplanes flying over the North Pole area from Asia.

747 Jet near Redoubt VolcanoAn airliner with 231
passengers flying at 27,900 feet suddenly had its engines flame out when
it flew into an ash cloud. As the airplane began dropping toward the
Earth the crew frantically tried to restart the engines.

Restarting the enginesAfter five terrifying minutes the engines were restarted
and the plane safely landed in Anchorage. The plane had dropped almost
two miles before the engines were restarted. It took eighty million
dollars to repair the aircraft which included replacing all four
engines.

Ash cloud dangersThe 747 jet had flown into an ash cloud erupted by Redoubt volcano. The
volcano began erupting on the morning of December 15, 1989 had been
erupting for 10 hours prior to the airplane flying through the ash
cloud. Redoubt continued to erupt into 1990. The eruptions spewed
enormous amount of ash into the air and clouds over the volcano.

Augustine volcano
Augustine volcano is another stratovolcano with a lava dome at its
summit. The volcano has an irregular coastline because of volcanic
activity. the first recorded eruption of the volcano was in 1812. The
dangers from this volcano is primarily from ashfall and tsunamis
generated by pyroclastic flows.

Eruption of Augustine volcanoThe most violent eruption in historic times occurred in 1883.
Pyroclastic flows generated a tsunami 27 feet high after the collapse of
the volcano. Major eruptions of Augustine have occurred in 1812, 1883,
1908, 1935, 1963-1964, 1976 and 1998. The 1986 eruption lasted five
months.

Activity on Mt. SpurrMt. Spurr is the eastern most volcano in the Aleutian chain. It is the
tallest peak that grew after a much larger stratovolcano erupted
creating a large caldera. A new satellite cone is growing 3.2 km Mt.
Spurr named Crater Peak. Almost all recent activity has been centered at
Crater Peak.

More Volcano Links

Lahars-Volcanic Mudflows
Find out more about lahars which are triggered by pyroclastic
flows, eruptions that can bring death and destruction to people living
near volcanoes.

Mount Pinatubo
Find out more about the second largest volcanic eruption of the 20th century.

Katmai Volcano
Find out more about this Alaskan volcano that was once thought
to be the source of the largest volcanic eruption of the 20th century.

Yellowstone Caldera
Find out more about Yellowstone and the many features of this supervolcano.